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| Years | Days | |
|---|---|---|
| A bracket flourish indicates the following entries Emilius Paulus; C. Sulpitius Gallus predicted a lunar eclipse before Christ | 172 | |
| Hipparchus of Rhodes observed the stars in Alexandria before Christ | 120 | |
| Abzachis likely a misspelling of Habash al-Hasib contemplated the stars in Rhodes | 115 | |
| M. T. Cicero and L. Taruntius the astronomer were famous | 59 | |
| Julius Caesar, through the work of Sosigenes the astronomer, returned the year to the course of the sun | 47 | |
| Virgil the poet and Vitruvius the architect flourished | 45 | |
| Caesar died before the incarnation of the Savior in the year | 38 | 1 |
| The Ptolemies and the Kingdom of Egypt ended | 30 | |
| Strabo the geographer preceded the incarnation of Christ | 20 | |
| Manilius the astronomer poet |
| Years | |
|---|---|
| Titus Livius of Padua and Ovid the poet died in the year after Christ | 19 |
| Marinus of Tyre, a geographical writer, lived after Christ | 60 |
| Andromachus of Crete, inventor of the theriaca antidote, and Lucan the poet flourished | 67 |
| Agrippa contemplated the stars in Bithynia | 94 |
| Proclus the astrologer is recognized after Christ in the year | 95 |
| Menelaus OCR reads "Mileus" sought the locations of the stars in Rome | 99 |
| C. Plinius Secundus perished while visiting Mount Vesuvius | 112 |
| Hadrian the Emperor began to reign after Christ | 120 |
| Galen the physician of Pergamon follows Christ by | 142 |
| Diophantus of Alexandria C. Ptolemy, philosopher and mathematician of Egypt, observed the stars in Alexandria | 150 |
| The reign of Diocletian began from the year of the incarnation | 283 |
| Julius Firmicus Maternus and Mavortius Lollianus lived | 320 |
| The Council in Nicaea was gathered, in which Arius was condemned | 320 |